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Year-old Sahag-Mesrob School may close; operating without a permit

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  • Year-old Sahag-Mesrob School may close; operating without a permit

    Pasadena Star-News, CA
    July 11 2009


    Year-old Sahag-Mesrob Armenian Christian School may close; operating
    without a permit

    By Robert S. Hong, Staff Writer
    Posted: 07/10/2009 08:34:11 PM PDT

    ALTADENA - Students at the year-old Sahag-Mesrob Armenian Christian
    School at 183 E. Palm St. may be headed back to their old location on
    Maiden Lane in the fall.

    The Superior Court has granted the county permission to close the Palm
    Street school, at least temporarily, because county officials said it
    has been operating for the past year without a conditional use
    permit. A CUP is required for any school to operate in a residential
    zone.

    But school officials say no law was broken.

    They contend that, because they are a religious school, they were
    operating lawfully under a federal religious land use permit, school
    Principal Shahe Garabedian said.

    "We're not violating anything, we just operated under the federal
    law," Garabedian said. "We came to an agreement (with the county) that
    we'll vacate the premises until we process the CUP."

    Deputy County Counsel Dusan Pavlovic said the school opened in
    September last year "without going through the full process"
    required. "Thereafter, the County Department of Regional Planning
    tried to persuade the school to cease operating, but they failed to do
    so," Pavlovic said.

    In the meantime, school officials said they have appealed the
    injunction. The court has given them permission to keep the Palm
    Street campus open until a decision is made on the injunction's merits
    in coming weeks.

    School officials said regardless of the outcome, students will have a
    place to go next year at the Maiden Lane school, where they have been
    for several years.
    The new elementary school, which was previously a group home for young
    children, now has about 240 students, Pavlovic said.

    Many of the school's neighbors had complained that noise and traffic
    caused a nuisance when they were trying to get in and out of driveways
    or drive down the street.

    "I think a lot of neighbors were not happy with (traffic) in the
    morning," said Eve Liu, who lives near the school.

    Garabedian said problems with traffic were overstated.

    He said county fire and sheriff's department officials inspected the
    traffic issue and no violations were reported.

    Neighbor William Middleton said he would be content with whatever the
    court decides.

    "It may not be as bad as some say, but it's been bad," Middleton
    said. "I just don't know whether that facility is the right facility"
    for the neighborhood.

    http://www.pasadenastarnews.com/new s/ci_12814486
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